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Biden Administration’s HHS awards over $500 million for Refugee Resettlement in North Carolina

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Through the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), the Department of Health and Human Services provides funding to states and non-profit organizations to assist refugees with housing, employment services, legal services, welfare-enrollment services, and even dollar-for-dollar matching contributions to refugee savings accounts. ACF also funds contracts for refugee intake facilities, which have been used to house illegal alien asylum applicants processed at the southern border.

In total, over $500 million of ACF funds have been awarded for refugee resettlement activities in North Carolina since 2021. Links to complete data tables are available at the end of this article.

The Biden Administration’s ACF has awarded a total of $286 million contracts related to an llegal alien intake facility in Greensboro, with $145 million outlayed as of July 5, 2024.

The 800-bed facility is located at American Hebrew Academy, which was awarded $50.4 million for the five-year lease.

ACF has also awarded over $230 million in contracts to New York-based Deployed Resources LLC for security, maintenance, and janitorial services for the Greensboro intake facility. Another $5 million contract for security guard services has been awarded to Chenega Naswik International LLC.

Over $221 million in primary grant awards have been issued during the Biden Administration for refugee aid and assistance services to be performed in North Carolina. These grants were issued to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services and to various religious and non-religious non-profit organizations.

The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services has been awarded $107 million in grants for various refugee assistance programs during the Biden administration, including $39 million for “refugee cash and medical assistance” and $68 million for “refugee support services and set asides”. Over 200 subgrants were issued with these funds throughout the state to local governments.

Non-profit ACF grantees in North Carolina provide comprehensive aid to refugees, including furnished apartments, assistance obtaining Social Security cards, enrollment in welfare benefits and health care, food, legal services, and employment services. Extended case management services are provided through two main ACF programs:

  • : up to one year of intensive case management services that includes free housing, mental health services, food assistance, income and employment assistance, financial management services, transportation, “social adjustment” services, legal services, and family wellness programs.

  • : up to six months of comprehensive assistance, including career services, housing, food, utilities, transportation, family budget planning, health care, and “social adjustment” services. Participating agencies must contribute one dollar for every two federal dollars for assistance. The program is typically referred to as the “Matching Grants program”.

Church World Service (CWS) received a $109 million grant for Preferred Communities Program activities in North Carolina. Church World Service maintains refugee resettlement offices in several parts of North Carolina, including Charlotte, Durham, Greensboro, Burlington, and Wilmington. The open borders advocacy group U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants was awarded a $3 million grant for services to Afghan refugees, as well as a $350,000 grant for an “Employer Engagement Program”…

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